Close X
Monday, November 25, 2024
ADVT 
National

With the death of Queen Elizabeth II, what happens to our bills and coins?

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 08 Sep, 2022 06:26 PM
  • With the death of Queen Elizabeth II, what happens to our bills and coins?

OTTAWA - Canadians are used to seeing Queen Elizabeth II on their money, but that could change following the death of the longest-serving British monarch and Canadian head of state.

However, the Bank of Canada, which produces Canada's paper bills, said changes likely won't be seen immediately.

The current $20 bank note featuring the Queen, is intended to circulate for years to come, the central bank said, and there is no legislative requirement to change the design within a prescribed period when the monarch changes, it said. New bank notes, including the portrait subject, are approved by the finance minister.

One observer says he doesn’t know if Canadians will ultimately see King Charles III, as he’s now known, on our bills.

"I don’t know if we will, since there is only the $20 that has the Queen on it, and Canadians may want to change this," said University of Toronto business history professor Dimitry Anastakis.

The government will likely keep the Queen on the $20 bill for a while before any changes are made, however, he noted.

The Royal Canadian Mint, which manufactures and distributes Canada's coins, said the government has exclusive jurisdiction over their design.

The mint said it will abide by the decision and timetable of the government on changing coins.

Mint spokesperson Alex Reeves said the legal tender status of coins currently in circulation does not change when a new monarch ascends the throne.

Coins with the face of the queen's father, King George VI, circulated for decades after his death.

They are more likely to change sooner than bills, however, said Anastakis.

"It is quite likely that we will see (the King) on our coinage in the next year or two, but this depends on the Mint, and what their plans are."

Anastakis said he doesn't know if the Mint already has images of King Charles III for the coinage or if the monarch needs to designate an official image.

The King cannot face the same direction as the Queen, who faces right, he added. Each monarch faces in the opposite direction to the one before.

Although it is tradition to feature the reigning monarch on Canadian currency, there are no rules requiring this.

The Queen appeared on the Bank of Canada's first series of bank notes as a child in 1935.

MORE National ARTICLES

VPD investigates Downtown Eastside machete attack

VPD investigates Downtown Eastside machete attack
Multiple witnesses flagged down police on June 19 around 7 p.m., after a 49-year-old man and a 38-year-old woman were approached from behind by the suspect and allegedly slashed while loading their luggage into a taxi near Main and East Hastings streets.

VPD investigates Downtown Eastside machete attack

Unsettled weather causes another B.C. flash flood

Unsettled weather causes another B.C. flash flood
Environment Canada is reporting about six millimetres of rain fell at the Prince George airport Tuesday, but doesn't mention the localized, intense thunderstorm that deluged the city's downtown core, flooding several streets.

Unsettled weather causes another B.C. flash flood

B.C. cabinet minister not running for NDP leader

B.C. cabinet minister not running for NDP leader
Horgan announced last week that he'll resign as leader in the fall after the party holds a leadership convention, saying his second bout with cancer left him with little energy for the job. Kahlon says he's throwing his support for the new leader behind Attorney General David Eby, who has yet to announce if he is running.

B.C. cabinet minister not running for NDP leader

Head-on crash in B.C. Interior kills three

Head-on crash in B.C. Interior kills three
Police say witnesses report a black sedan crossed into the path of an oncoming westbound SUV, hitting it head on. The RCMP say the crash killed a 51-year-old Sorrento man, a 67-year old woman and a 60-year-old man, both from Blind Bay.

Head-on crash in B.C. Interior kills three

Questions remain after B.C. bank shootout

Questions remain after B.C. bank shootout
Twenty-two-year-old Mathew and Isaac Auchterlonie of Duncan, B.C., were killed by police in a shootout that left six officers injured outside a Bank of Montreal branch in Saanich on June 28.    

Questions remain after B.C. bank shootout

Multi-vehicle collision on 176 Street in Surrey leads to road closure

Multi-vehicle collision on 176 Street in Surrey leads to road closure
Southbound lanes of 176 Street are closed from 88 Avenue to 96 Avenue. The investigation is in the early stages and it is unknown how long the road closure will remain in effect.

Multi-vehicle collision on 176 Street in Surrey leads to road closure